Love - A Sweet Poison
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Love: A Sweet Poison is an anthology of nineteen short stories based on the theme of love that becomes poison if reciprocated wrongly to appease the false ego leaving behind emptiness of dark silence and heaps of shattered dreams. Love is a divine neurological feeling and psychological necessity like thirst and hunger. It would be erroneous to elevate ‘Love’ to the level of ‘God’, but the fact—love permeates the whole universe—cannot be ignored. Love is a feeling less to be defined and more to be experienced, so love blindly and unconditionally to lump up your emotions more vehemently but only when the time is ripe and circumstances favourable. Side-effects of passionate love, romance, betrayal, heartbreaks and ditching of partners after sexual gratification, etc., have been chosen exclusively as core issues in this anthology which will prove a torchbearer to the teens and youngsters. This anthology highlights the pernicious results of love as an obsession at an immature age, and it will take you to a world of badly broken hearts and never healing scarred souls.
Read moreAbout the Book
Love: A Sweet Poison is an anthology of nineteen short stories based on the theme of love that becomes poison if reciprocated wrongly to appease the false ego leaving behind emptiness of dark silence and heaps of shattered dreams. Love is a divine neurological feeling and psychological necessity like thirst and hunger. It would be erroneous to elevate ‘Love’ to the level of ‘God’, but the fact—love permeates the whole universe—cannot be ignored. Love is a feeling less to be defined and more to be experienced, so love blindly and unconditionally to lump up your emotions more vehemently but only when the time is ripe and circumstances favourable. Side-effects of passionate love, romance, betrayal, heartbreaks and ditching of partners after sexual gratification, etc., have been chosen exclusively as core issues in this anthology which will prove a torchbearer to the teens and youngsters. This anthology highlights the pernicious results of love as an obsession at an immature age, and it will take you to a world of badly broken hearts and never healing scarred souls.
Book Details
Customer Reviews
14/12/2022
Spriha Upadhyay
I bought this book from Rachnaye app @rachnayeofficial from a friend's recommendation. And to be honest, the book has stood upto levels which has impressed me. I was touched, when the author said, that love is a divine neurological feeling and psychological necessity but becomes poison reciprocated wrongly to appease false ego. How true of the author to write that. The book is a collection of beautiful nineteen stories that touch your heart. To me, the eighth story, "Love at Third Sight" by Surbhi Sareen appealed the most because I've seen all of that happening in a near dear one's life. This story is about two protagonists Miki and Naren whose fathers are best friends since childhood. Miki initially mistakens Naren for a worker at the sweet shop owned by Naren's father, and soon sparks start flying between the two and its a treat for the reader to witness the passion and romance. The best thing about the book is that all the nineteen don't narrate some bollywood unreasonable story, which is unbelievable but sweet stories which make you crave to have such kinda romance in your life. Would definitely recommend it to everyone! Loved it.
Love - A Sweet Poison examines the corrosive edge of what should nurture us. Across nineteen stories, this anthology maps the precise moment affection curdles into toxicity—not through absence, but through false reciprocity, where love serves ego rather than connection. The collection treats love as both neurological necessity and moral test, positioning it alongside hunger and thirst yet acknowledging its singular capacity to devastate when misdirected. What distinguishes this work is its refusal to treat toxic love as melodrama; instead, each narrative dissects the psychological architecture of attachment gone wrong, the emptiness of dark silence that follows manipulation, and the particular grief of dreams shattered not by fate but by human failing. The anthology asks readers to confront love's dual nature—divine yet dangerous, essential yet capable of profound harm—through scenarios that resist easy moral resolution.
What kind of reading experience does Love - A Sweet Poison offer?
This anthology delivers emotionally unsettling rather than comforting reading. Across nineteen stories, you encounter love at its most destabilizing—reciprocated for the wrong reasons, weaponized by ego, leaving characters in aftermath rather than resolution. The pace varies by story, but the cumulative effect is sobering: each narrative peels back one more layer of how affection becomes poison. Readers seeking romance will find instead a psychological examination of when and why intimacy fails. The book rewards those comfortable sitting with ambiguity and emotional discomfort, leaving behind a deepened wariness about the difference between genuine connection and its convincing counterfeits.
Who should read this book and what does it expect from its readers?
- Readers drawn to psychological realism over romantic idealism in love stories
- Those interested in the darker spectrum of human relationships—manipulation, ego-driven attachment, emotional toxicity
- Fans of short fiction who appreciate thematic cohesion across varied narrative voices
- Readers willing to engage with morally complex characters rather than clear heroes and villains
- Anyone seeking fiction that treats love as a force capable of both sustaining and destroying, without sentimentality
Why does the theme of toxic love resonate particularly with contemporary Indian readers?
In a culture where family approval, social expectation, and personal desire often collide, the idea of love serving false ego rather than genuine connection speaks to lived experience. Contemporary India navigates arranged marriages alongside dating apps, traditional values alongside individual autonomy—contexts where affection can easily become transactional or performative. Stories examining when love turns poisonous mirror anxieties about choosing partners under family pressure, maintaining relationships for status, or confusing possession with devotion. The anthology taps into a cultural moment increasingly questioning inherited romantic scripts while still feeling their pull.
What makes this anthology's treatment of love's destructive power distinctive?
Rather than attributing toxicity to external circumstances or tragic fate, this collection locates poison in the reciprocity itself—in how love is returned wrongly, offered to appease ego rather than honor the other. The framing of love as a neurological feeling and psychological necessity like hunger positions these stories at the intersection of emotion and biology, suggesting our deepest attachments operate on drives we only partly control. This physiological lens makes the betrayals and manipulations more disturbing: characters aren't just heartbroken, they're starving, their fundamental needs weaponized against them through misdirected affection.
What does this book leave readers with after the final story?
A lasting wariness about the difference between love that nourishes and love that depletes. The anthology doesn't offer redemption arcs or healing; instead, it maps the specific topography of emotional damage—the emptiness of dark silence, the weight of shattered dreams. Readers finish with a sharpened ability to recognize when affection serves ego rather than genuine care, and a sobering awareness that our deepest human need can become our greatest vulnerability. The collection resists cynicism while demanding vigilance, leaving behind not despair about love itself but a more clear-eyed understanding of its capacity for harm when reciprocated wrongly.

